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Marco Antonio Barrera names his best opponent after facing some of boxing’s biggest names

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Marco Antonio Barrera names his best opponent after facing some of the biggest names in boxing

Marco Antonio Barrera has faced many boxing legends in his illustrious career, but when the Mexican was asked about his toughest opponent in history, he had no doubt who held that title.

Barrera won his first 43 professional fights, capturing the WBO super bantamweight world title in the process, before consecutive defeats to Junior Jones cost him the crown and led to a brief retirement.

However, the “Baby-Faced Assassin” quickly returned and regained the WBO belt, only losing it during a unification attempt with WBC champion Eric Morales and then eventually moving up to featherweight.

AND they score famous points over “Prince” Naseem Hamed he started life at 126 pounds in style in his debut at the weight before avenging his loss to Morales to win the WBC featherweight title.

After handing over the WBC belt, a defeat to Manny Pacquiao saw “Pac Man” win Barrera’s title, and Barrera soon decided to fight at super featherweight, after returning to winning ways against Paulie Ayala.

Once again, Barrera was able to defeat Morales and win in a trilogy that spanned three weight classes, but Pacquiao seemed to have his number; after the Filipino icon defeated him for the second time in 2007.

Still, in an interview with The Ring, Barrera maintained that Morales was the toughest dance partner of his career, regardless of the fact that he defeated “El Terrible” twice.

“Morales was definitely the toughest opponent I’ve ever faced because it seemed like every time I hit him it wouldn’t hurt him. And this is a guy who was constantly putting pressure on me and he hit really, really strenuous.”

Barrera hung up his gloves in 2011 with a 67-7 record and was inducted into the International Boxing Hall of Fame in 2017.

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Boxing

Sources: Torrez v. Sanchez title eliminator (knee).

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Sources close to the situation told ESPN on Wednesday that undefeated IBF heavyweight title qualifier Richard Torrez Jr. against Frank Sanchez on March 28, will be sidelined after Sanchez’s injury.

Torrez Jr. (14-0, 12 KO) was scheduled to face Sanchez (27-1, 18 KO, 1 No Contest) in the PPV opener of Sebastian Fundora’s WBC junior middleweight title defense against Keith Thurman at the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas. However, Cuban Sanchez was forced to withdraw from the fight due to a knee injury. Sources tell ESPN that inflammation of Sanchez’s surgically repaired right knee will force the fight to be postponed to a later date.

Torrez Jr. and Sanchez are ranked No. 9 and 10, respectively, in ESPN’s heavyweight rankings. The winner would become the mandatory challenger to the title of Aleksander Usyk, who currently holds the IBF, WBC and WBA titles.

Usyk will put his WBC title on the line against kickboxer Rico Verhoeven on May 23 at the Giza Pyramids in Egypt. Usyk recently stated that he has three fights left before he calls it a career, and the winner of Torrez and Sanchez is not on his list.

“Listen, Rico [Verhoeven] this is the first. Secondly, who will win, [WBO champion Fabio] Wardley or [Daniel] Dubois and the third fight is my friend, the greedy belly Tyson Fury,” Usyk told Inside the Ring.

Torrez Jr. beat Tomas Salk last November, and Sanchez defeated Ramon Olivas Echeverria via third-round TKO in February.

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Tyson Fury eyes September fight as Joshua returns uncertain

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Image: Tyson Fury eyes major fight by September as Anthony Joshua return uncertain

His promoter Frank Warren says Fury’s return is intended to restart Fury’s run towards another major fight before the end of the summer.

“Tyson has his finger on the pulse and knows what he wants to do,” Warren told DAZN, discussing Fury’s plans for the rest of the year. “I can’t feel it [Anthony Joshua] he will be ready, but if he is there and wants it, Tyson is there. If he doesn’t, Tyson will want to fight a substantial fight in August or September. That’s what he wants.”

The most discussed option remains a meeting with Anthony Joshua. Fans have waited years for the all-British heavyweight clash that once seemed inevitable when both men held world titles at the same time. Saudi boxing boss Turki Alalshikh had previously considered the possibility of staging the fight this summer, but Joshua’s involvement in a stern car crash in Nigeria tardy last year caused uncertainty over the timetable for his return to the ring.

Warren said Fury’s focus is firmly on competition this year after spending most of last year on outside projects.

“The past year has been about his TV series, other commitments and the documentary,” Warren said. “This year it’s about getting the number one position and that’s where his head is.”

If Joshua isn’t ready by tardy summer, other options may become available. WBO heavyweight champion Fabio Wardley has already expressed interest in fighting Fury if he successfully defends his belt against Daniel Dubois on May 9.

Wardley previously said he offered Fury the fight earlier in the year, before both men moved on to other fights.

“I said, ‘Listen, if you want to go straight away, we can go straight away, no problem,’” Wardley told Sky Sports. “But if he wants a little warm-up and wants to go through it and see how he feels, then frosty. I’ll still be ready and I’ll be waiting when I’m done with Daniel for a substantial fight.”

For now, Fury’s main goal remains an April return against Makhmudov. If Warren gets through this fight injury-free, Warren expects the former champion to compete in a major event later in the year, and Joshua’s fight is still something most fans want to see.

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Mike Tyson assesses Terence Crawford’s chances against Four Kings Leonard, Duran, Hagler and Hearns

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Mike Tyson rates Terence Crawford’s chances against the Four Kings Leonard, Duran, Hagler and Hearns

Mike Tyson assessed Terence Crawford’s chances against the Four Kings, determining how successful “Bud” would be in such a competitive era.

WITH Crawford is dedicating time to his decorated career Last December, when he became the five-division world champion, many wondered how he would fare against the likes of Sugar Ray Leonard, Marvin Hagler, Thomas Hearns and Roberto Duran.

During this iconic era, all four champions competed at the highest level for many years, with Leonard, Hearns and Duran fighting in multiple weight classes.

Meanwhile, Hagler weighed 160 pounds throughout his career, making 12 successful world title defenses before losing to Leonard in 1987 by controversial split decision.

However, during his nearly seven-year reign, “Marvelous” scored a unanimous decision victory over Duran and stopped Hearns in the third round of a shootout that many consider to be the greatest of all time in its own right.

As for the other Four Kings, who also fought at welterweight, super middleweight and super middleweight, it could be said that their careers are more similar to Crawford’s.

Regardless of the weight class, former heavyweight champion Tyson he told Ring magazine that Crawford shone brightly in the era of the Four Kings.

“It would be a handsome fight. There were people back then who weren’t as good as.” [Crawford] was, [but they] they were champions.

– He would do well [in that era]”

Even though Crawford had never fought at super middleweight before, he was able to dethrone Canelo Alvarez to become the undisputed three-division champion last September.

But his greatest success arguably came at 147 pounds, when the American stopped seven opponents before engineering a devastating ninth-round finish over Errol Spence Jr. in 2023.

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